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Do you have a Bagel Brain?

By Dr. Davis | July 12, 2018

We can link grain consumption with causing or worsening some of the most mysterious brain disorders that have eluded the medical community for years, such as schizophrenia, epilepsy, depression, bipolar disorder, and, more recently, autism and ADHD.

Are you and your kids unknowingly under the influence of opiates? Opiates come disguised in many forms.

Grains contain opiates. Not figuratively, but quite literally. These opiates are not too different from morphine or heroin. Yes, wheat and grains, cleverly disguised as a multigrain loaf of bread to make sandwiches or a hot, steamy plate of macaroni and cheese for the kids are mind-altering drugs. You and your kids are not oxycodone addicts, but when you consume wheat and grains, the results are not all that different.

How can this be?When you consume the gliadin protein of wheat and the closely related proteins of other grains (secalin in rye, hordein in barley, zein in corn), they break down into smaller 4- or 5- amino-acid-long peptides. These peptides penetrate your brain and bind themselves to opiate receptors.

Even selecting organic isn’t safe. This is true even if grains are organic, traditional or heirloom, or sprouted. This is because grains contain toxic components naturally, only made worse by recent genetic manipulations.

In people with conditions such as bipolar illness and schizophrenia, grains yield effects such as impulsive behavior and paranoia; in children with attention deficit disorder and autism, they cause behavioral outbursts and shorten attention spans; in people prone to bulimia and binge eating disorder, they cause 24-hour-a-day food obsessions. In those prone to depression, they cause dark moods and even suicidal thoughts.

In people without these conditions, grains only serve to trigger appetite in an irresistible, never-satisfied way. Most of us take in 400 calories (or more) per day from this appetite-increasing effect, sometimes as much as 1,000 or more calories per day. Some people even develop incapacitating and addictive relationships with food due to exposure to gliadin-derived opiates, often resulting food in obsessions in people prone to eating disorders.

Lack of concentration, inability to focus, impaired learning, impaired decision-making ability, and sleepiness are exceptionally common after consuming wheat, rye, and barley. Gliadin-derived opiates are the likely culprits behind these effects, given their known ability to affect the mind. It’s also likely that blood sugar fluctuations caused by all grains contribute. This is especially true of the low blood sugar episodes experienced by individuals dealing with hypoglycemia.

Attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder and autistic spectrum disorder. While these disorders are unrelated, they share a similar response to gliadin-derived opiates. Children and adults with these conditions experience behavioral outbursts, such as temper tantrums or emotional “storms” without reason, and they have an impaired capacity to sustain attention. Kids with these conditions already have an impaired ability to learn and pay attention for more than a few seconds or minutes; grain-derived opiates make it worse. A recent analysis demonstrated that kids with autism lack the markers for celiac disease (such as transglutaminase antibody), but they do have increased levels of antibodies to gliadin, especially if gastrointestinal symptoms like diarrhea are present.

Paranoid schizophrenia. The worsening of paranoia, auditory hallucinations (hearing voices and receiving warnings or commands), and social disengagement were among the first observations made when researchers started studying the effects of wheat consumption on brain health, attributable to the gliadin protein–derived opiates. This effect may be confined to schizophrenics who express an autoimmune response to the gliadin protein, the group most likely to improve with wheat, rye, and barley avoidance.

Bipolar illness. We know that people with bipolar illness express higher levels of antibodies in response to the gliadin protein, similar to the phenomenon observed in schizophrenics. Gliadin-derived opiate peptides likely also play a role in generating distortions in judgment and reality experienced with this condition.

Depression. If there is predisposition for depression, grains—especially wheat, rye, barley, and corn—can magnify or unmask that tendency. Depression due to the gliadin- and prolamin protein–derived opiates can be mild, resulting in a pervasive feeling of unhappiness and lack of interest, or it can be incapacitating and life threatening, complete with obsessive thoughts of suicide or self-harm. Both wheat and corn are also responsible for reductions in brain serotonin that regulates mood.

Obsessive-compulsive disorder. A person who has obsessive-compulsive disorder helplessly gives in to the impulse to obsessively and compulsively perform some action or engage in some thought—behaviors that have been associated with wheat consumption. It might be compulsive hand washing, or housecleaning, or checking and rechecking (and rechecking and rechecking) figures in a ledger. Being locked into such behavioral loops can be debilitating for the sufferer. These rituals can dominate their thoughts and behaviors, as well as sabotage success at school and work.

While some of these effects are associated with an immune response against one or more grain proteins, many are not.

There is hope. If you know that grains can worsen or cause deterioration in mental conditions, it also means that you know how to undo or lessen the severity of all of these effects. Isn’t it time to kick the habit once and for all?

Val,
I can attest that since discovering The Wheat Belly Cook Book in October, right after getting a blood test result saying “diabetic”, I lost 30 pounds. And all I had to do was shop, prepare, eat, and not cheat. I did get into pre-biotics as well, and mention it because I’m still wondering why I’m not -as in NOT- lactose intolerant any more. And I was severely lactose intolerant. The dairy products that once sent me flying fastest; bleu cheese, cream cheese… – are now merely delicious. Don’t ask me why I dared the initial tiny, tentative tastes, which lead to generous free-style feta fests, but I can tell you that 10 months into Wheat Belly life is very different. Tortuous acid reflux (and its mandatory daily pill) is over. Gone! I stand amazed. So, yes, I have my own questions about what exactly brought these changes on, but I can tell you with utmost certainty that they occurred and I’m reaping the benefits, which include non-diabetic test-strip numbers.

I experienced this first hand when my wheat allergy symptoms really came to a head. I mostly just suffered eczema and a minor itchy rash at first that progressed to an incredibly persistent and chronic skin itch.

I remember driving and seeing very subtle images or shadows in the corners of my vision. It didn’t affect safety of driving whatsoever but seemed very weird. It got to a point where I was home alone a few times and thought someone was breaking into the house and thought I heard very low-volume, menacing chatter a couple other times.

I never really suffered from depression (as some people say they do) that I can remember while eating grains. It was mostly just severe itching and skin rash

Wheat free diet was a miracle to me… I lost 30 pounds, do not have to take medications (took 5 before), no more acid reflux, sleep better, have more energy, no more brain fog, I am much calmer.
IT CHANGED MY LIFE!!!

A neighbor who went at least gluten free said that he noticed he is no longer plagued by songs that would keep going through his head after he heard them on the radio. Since he stopped eating gluten, that problem went away. He did have a recurrence after eating cotton candy. Maybe the addiction centers in the brain were stimulated by gluten and sugar, and that caused the obsessive repetition of music in his brain.

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